The Importance and Power of Taking a Break (Season Finale)

Season 5 has been fantastic.  We feel so thankful to our guests for sharing their stories. 

Which emotion-character from “Inside Out” are you?  Sanath and Brittany reveal the characters they relate to the most.  Rare parents experience the full range of emotions, sometimes in the period of a single day, and it can get very tiring.    

In the season finale, we talk about the need to step away and retreat into the cave to discover the next leg of the journey.  

We are taking a bit of break too.  We plan to be back in early 2025. 

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Complicated

As a new parent, you feel like “Oh, my gosh, I must be going crazy” or…

…maybe the doctors don’t even understand what is going on.

In some instances, those doctors begin to question the parents and their motives.  There is even a diagnosis for this, Munchausen By Proxy (MBP).   The problem is that the signs of MBP and just being a good parent of a rare child look very much the same.

Donna Sullivan discusses her traumatic experience of being suspected of imagining her two kids’ illnesses.  Her relentless advocacy was costing her credibility.

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Wes Michael: Dedicated to Amplifying the Rare Patient Voice

We often hear the stories of patients and caregivers.

Rare Patient Voice is well known for connecting family's stories with the researchers who need to hear them. The founder, Wes Michael, sat down with us to share the results of a caregiver survey they conducted in late 2023.

These data can now be used to make the case for new policy, for the need to provide for these families, and even to explain to outsiders what they are going through.

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Coming Together For A Cure - Blake Benton Part 2

In Part 1, we heard about the bold and courageous approach that Ryan Benton's family took to treat his Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy.

The mission of CTFAC is to make stem cell therapy the standard of care for Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy a wide variety of rare and debilitating diseases.

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A Bold and Courageous Approach - Coming Together For A Cure

Blake Benton’s earliest memories were his brother declining due to Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy.

About 10 years later, his parents and brother made a bold move. They went to Costa Rica to get an experimental stem cell therapy.

Ryan and Blake started a non-profit named after a benefit concert they held – Coming Together for a Cure (CTFAC). The goal of CTFAC is to advocate for more stem cell research in DMD and other diseases. There are many challenges, especially in the US.

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Find Your Real Friends in Your Rare Disease Community

Type 1 Diabetes (T1D) is not considered a rare disease according to the numbers. The T1D community is quite large and includes people of all ages, races, geography, and conditions. Many of our guests use the technology developed for T1D patients. Suzanne Hansen has become part of Brittany’s inner circle of T1D experts. We talk a lot about the tech, but the real story is the power of connecting with others who get what you are going through.

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This is Who These Rare Kiddos Are

Beyond the Diagnosis is more than a traveling art exhibit. It is a movement to humanize the children who happen to have a rare disease. Raghav’s mom Ramya describes it as “creating joy and a feeling of permanence in the fleeting lives we have.”

Listen to rare mom Patricia Weltin describe the origins and the unexpected organic growth of this movement.

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What Have We Learned in the Last 6 Months?

We discuss the joys, challenges, and surprises of raising a child with a rare disease on every episode.

In this conversation, we reflect on what each of us has learned through these discussions, through life “outside the podcast,” and through other people we have met along the way.

Without any set plan we wander through resilience, learning not to react to some changes in our kids, and the need to inject some art and creativity into the logical and scientific world of rare diseases. Each of these topics are the result and the formative process of our individual growth. And by sharing our lived experiences we fuel that growth.

The three of us really enjoy and appreciate having these open, vulnerable discussions; we learn so much about ourselves and each other. We hope you do too.

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Myles Was Here To Teach Us

Losing a child is heartbreaking. Ashley Genelin lost her son Myles when he was just 3 years old. He was diagnosed with cardiofasciocutaneous syndrome or CFC. They did their best to keep him at home as long as possible, even when caring for Myles was like running an ICU. Make-A-Wish allowed them to take this mini-ICU on the road so that Myles could enjoy being with their extended family and the great outdoors. The memories built in this medical camper still serve to connect the rest of the family with Myles.

Ashley has leaned into all of this and now serves CFC community full-time. She was a member of the Board of CFC International and now is on staff. She hopes that sharing her story will make this easier for other families and will lead to changes in how the world manages rare syndromes like CFC.

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One Day You Will be on the Other Side

The moment she was born, Michelle says she knew it in her bones that something was different about her daughter even though she didn’t start seeing symptoms for another two months. Over the next few months, Michelle spent a lot of her time googling, asking others for their opinions and was eventually able to see an Ophthalmologist who noticed an issue and suggested seeing Geneticist and then a neurologist after a misdiagnosis.

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Finding Purpose in All of It

Josh and Kristin Hoyle knew that life with their new daughter Chloe was going to be different and likely difficult long before she was born. Even in this knowledge, they believed there was a purpose for what they were about to experience. And they leaned into the challenge.

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We all handle life (and our diagnoses) differently

On this episode of Raising Rare we talk with Stacy Lloyd, a rare disease patient and board certified patient advocate. Stacy has dedicated her life, even much of her free time to healthcare in one way or another. After being diagnosed with Von Hippel-Lindau (VHL) at a young age, doctors told Stacy that she might not be able to walk as she got older and tumors continued to grow. She went on believing this for most of her early adult life and even admits that she never thought about retirement or other aspects of growing older because they just wouldn’t pertain to her. It wasn’t until 2018 that a doctor she met at a medical conference for VHL told her that she was going to be alright, she would be just fine, that she started to really consider her life.

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They won’t be children forever: the transition from pediatric to adult care

On this episode of Raising Rare we talk with Neil Ead, a 40 year veteran of the nursing field who has focused his career on pediatrics and more specifically chronic care. Neil discuses with our cohosts the importance of preparing in advance for the transition from pediatrics to adult care. This process includes finding replacements for most to all members of the care team and how hard this can be for the team members and the family.

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Creating Connections in a Fragmented Landscape

On this episode of Raising Rare we talk with Megan Nolan, a rare mama working to make a difference for other Rare Families. Megan has launched the online magazine Rareparenting.com in an effort to provide rare families with resources that may be beneficial to them.

Listen along as our hosts discuss the different obstacles she has faced and why certain aspects of her son’s journey with FOXG1 have taken so long.

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Revisiting Moments

This episode we are joined by Aisling Finn, an amazing poet and rare disease mama.  As she shares her poetry with us, we react to the emotions, struggles, key moments and pain that are so clearly pictured in her words.  Aisling shares with us the impact that writing poetry has had on her, and her expression of her feelings, and how they have helped her cope with her own rare mama journey.  Each of the poems that Aisling shares with us touches on a different impact of her life, stories that so many rare parents can relate to, understand, and feel the impact of. This episode is truly special.

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Other end of the tunnel: True reality of hope is effort

On this episode in our Other End of the Tunnel Series we are joined by Mark Dant. When their son was just three years old, Mark and his wife were told that their son would pass within the decade after his diagnosis of MPS 1 and the lack of treatments available. As they laid on his floor listening to him breathe on the night of his diagnosis, they buried the home that might have been and the dreams of the life that was no longer possible. 

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A new year, a new season. Glad to be back!

Welcome back! We can’t believe we are already on our fifth season of Raising Rare. So much has happened since we started this podcast and we hope to keep evolving, growing, and bringing remarkable stories and individuals to all of our listeners.

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Season 4 Finale

The Raising Rare team is so thankful for all of you tuning in to every episode, sharing your stories with us, and giving us the energy that we have needed to keep this going. We hope you join us again after our break to listen in as we see what Season 5 brings.

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Never Give Up.  Mistakes will lead you to discoveries

At 2 years old, her boys first showed signs of speech delays which triggered a long journey to a diagnosis. After visiting multiple doctors and hospitals all over the country it turned out to be an at home test and Julia’s background in chemistry that proved to be an integral part in her son’s diagnosis.

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What if we could reduce the stress of caregiving?

On this episode of Raising Rare we talk with one of Kevin’s old colleagues, Vik Sharma. Vik is the father of two wonderful children. Vik talks with our hosts about the importance of patience, the reality of impatience, and how humbling being a caregiver really is.

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